Cette semaine @NASA : Éclipse lunaire totale, chasse aux tremblements de terre sur Mars, Boeing Starliner et mission supersonique en avion X-Plane.

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Lunar Eclipse Marsquakes Boeing Starliner

Eclipse lunaire Tremblements de Mars Boeing Starliner

La prochaine mission d’essai de l’équipage commercial vers la station spatiale …

Présentation des objectifs de l’agence pour l’exploration de l’espace lointain ….

Et la couverture de l’éclipse lunaire totale sur Terre et depuis l’espace … quelques-unes des histoires à vous raconter – This Week at NASA!

Lancement d’une mission commerciale d’essai sans équipage vers la station spatiale

Le 19 mai, le vaisseau spatial CST-100 Starliner de Boeing a décollé de la station spatiale de Cap Canaveral, en Floride, dans le cadre de la mission Orbital Flight Test-2 ou OFT-2. Cette mission est le deuxième vol sans équipage du Starliner vers la station dans le cadre de notre programme Commercial Crew.

La NASA trace les grandes lignes d’un vol de la Lune vers Mars Objectives

On May 17, NASA released a draft set of high-level objectives identifying 50 points that fall under four overarching categories of exploration for future Artemis missions to return astronauts to the Moon in preparation for human exploration of Mars. The agency is asking U.S. industry, academia, international communities, and other stakeholders to provide input on these deep space exploration objectives. Learn more at nasa.gov/moontomars.

Total Lunar Eclipse May 2022

A telescopic visualization of the total lunar eclipse, happening May 15-16, 2022. Credit: NASA/Goddard/Ernie Wright

NASA Covers Total Lunar Eclipse

The latest episode of our NASA Science Live was all about the total lunar eclipse on the evening of May 15, overnight into May 16. It featured NASA experts and live views of the eclipse from around the world. Meanwhile, our Lucy spacecraft captured the imagery of the eclipse seen in this time-lapse when the traveling spacecraft was about 64 million miles from Earth. It shows Earth on the left and the Moon on the right, which can be seen disappearing into darkness as it passes through Earth’s shadow. The Lucy spacecraft is on its way to study Jupiter’s Trojan asteroids.

NASA Mars InSight

This illustration shows NASA’s Mars InSight lander on the Martian surface. Credit: NASA

InSight Still Hunting Marsquakes as Power Levels Diminish

Dust on the solar panels of our InSight Mars lander is causing the spacecraft to gradually lose power. As a result, the InSight team anticipates that the lander will become inoperative by the end of this year. InSight, which arrived at Mars in November 2018, has so far detected more than 1,300 marsquakes and collected information to help improve our understanding of the interiors of rocky planets, including Earth.

Ultracold Bubbles on Space Station

Inside NASA’s Cold Atom Lab, scientists form bubbles from ultracold gas, shown in pink in this illustration. Lasers, also depicted, are used to cool the atoms, while an atom chip, illustrated in gray, generates magnetic fields to manipulate their shape, in combination with radio waves. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Ultracold Bubbles on Space Station Open New Paths for Quantum Research

NASA’s Cold Atom Lab, the first-ever quantum physics facility aboard the International Space Station, has been used to shape atoms of gas cooled to nearly absolute zero – or about minus 459 degrees Fahrenheit – into extremely thin, hollow spheres. This is similar to how liquids behave in microgravity and can’t be duplicated on Earth. The accomplishment could lead to new kinds of experiments with a state of matter distinctly different from gases, liquids, solids, and plasmas, called a Bose-Einstein condensate or BEC. In a BEC, scientists can observe the quantum properties of atoms at a scale visible to the naked eye.

X-59 QueSST

Lockheed Martin X-59 QueSST. Credit: Lockheed Martin

New Name for NASA’s Supersonic X-Plane Mission

Our research mission to enable supersonic air travel over land has been renamed Quesst. The name, which includes an extra “s” to represent “supersonic,” replaces the mission’s original name: The Low-Boom Flight Demonstration. Through Quesst, NASA plans to demonstrate that the X-59 research aircraft can fly faster than sound without generating the loud sonic booms supersonic aircraft typically produce.

That’s what’s up this week @NASA …

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